The "Extended" Wycliffe Kennel
in the
| Joy Tongue | Arlene Brown | Executive | Harold Langseth |
| Kathleen Baker/Lois Kletsch | Jean Blackmore | Others |
Joy Tongue (
Acadia, Haus Brau, Winshire and
"I was seeing a great deal of Jean Lyle,
because we were always competing with each other and were
great friends. She was campaigning a lovely bitch
called Nicola, a daughter of Carillon Dilemma and Jacqueline. I fell in love
with Nicky and Jean let me take her home."
(from a 1981 Poodle Variety interview)
The
"owner" could show the dog, do obedience with it or even breed it.
However, the arrangement was almost always with the provision that Jean could
breed from the dog if she wanted to.
Nicola
was bred to her half-brother, Thomas, in early 1960. Out of the litter of
seven, five finished! Joy kept a bitch named Acadia
Barbara Beloved. Jean Lyle apparently took Victoria
of Acadia, and later bred to Acadia Barrymore and Boulette. In 1962, Boulette
was bred back to her father, Thomas, while
Joy
bred Barbara Beloved to Timothy in 1962 to obtain her "C" litter,
which included Acadia Conversation Piece.
(Like Jean Lyle, she gave each puppy in a litter a name starting with the same
letter of the alphabet.) She continued to breed about 2 litters a year, mostly
out of Nicola, Conversation Piece, and - to add a little variety - a Bel Tor bitch she had purchased
called Caramel Souffle (a
café-au-lait). The males were mostly Wycliffe or
Wycliffe derived from Wycliffe (including her own).
Arlene Brown (Haus
Brau)
After Thomas, the Wycliffe dog with the greatest
impact on the was his son, Ian (1963),
who went to June Hobbs. [If June had a kennel name, I have been unable to
discover it. She does not appear to have been a breeder herself, but allowed
others to use Ian.]
Ian
was bred only three or four times. Sadly, he died from a Leptospirosis
infection a month short of his third birthday. Despite the brief career, he has
more descendants than any other Wycliffe male after Thomas. Ian's first litter
was from his aunt Theresa, in 1964, to produce the Wycliffe "M2"
litter. The second was to Chantilly Caprice (see
below) in 1965. The third, by Arlene Brown in 1966, was to Haus
Sachse's Rebecca. The litter included Haus Brau Adorable Aegina, Aladin and Angelique.
The
next year, Arlene bred Angelique to Wycliffe Murdoch.
Murdoch, a son of Ian, was owned by Mitzi Burt (Shady Acre) of
For
the piéce de résistance, she bred Clarion to his aunt
Executive
In 1968, Joy Tongue acquired Executive, Haus Brau's Executive of
Acadia, aka "Zec"
(or sometimes "Zek") from Arlene Brown.
"About this time Arlene wrote to me and said
that she was thinking of getting out of dogs and had to get rid of this
puppy... whose name was Executive."
Joy
was not enthusiastic about adding another dog, but felt it would be rude to say
no straight away. So she called Arlene and promised to "look at him"
if Arlene brought Executive to an upcoming show in
"I was six feet away at the end of the lead,
started taking him up and down and he just flew -- his head was so high and his
neck so high that he looked exactly like a saddlebred
horse. I was absolutely enchanted."
Executive
quickly established a reputation as a desirable male. His record of 51
champions is particularly impressive in that he wasn't at stud for a very long
time. Zec suffered his first bloat attack in 1973
and, though he survived, Joy stopped breeding him.
"It's the worst thing that can happen to a
dog, and when you have watched it you don't want to propagate it. When I found
out that some of his puppies were having it I simply could not go on using him.
That's one of the reasons I got out of breeding."
Executive
experienced two more bloat attacks, but survived and continued to live with Joy
until his death at 14. Despite her warnings, many breeders continued to use
Executive's bloat-prone progeny and the problem continues to plague many of his
descendants.
Harold Langseth
(Winshire/Langcroft,
In 1969, Harold Langseth
tried to reproduce the Executive breeding by mating Clarion's sister Cheri to
The
third, in 1972, was out of Haus Brau Intrigue, and produced Langcroft Country Romance. In
1975 she was bred to Dassin
Debauchery (Pride). The litter included an
outstanding white male, Langcroft
Country Pride, sire of 42 champions.
Gentry was apparently not used more extensively
because he was discovered to be dysplastic. Harold Langseth later bred Toy Poodles, and was still active as an
AKC Judge when this article was written.
Kathleen Baker (
Kathleen Baker started breeding Standard Poodles
around 1955 and continued until 1981. Her founders were a diverse collection
that included Pillicoc
Pact of Estid and Glycene's
Majestic Ko-Ko, sire and dam of her "B"
litter. (If there was an "A" litter, none are listed in the
database.) Her 1957 "C" litter, which included Caprice, was sired by
the white Wycliffe male Fabulous Fabian (Wencair's Frere Jacques x
Wycliffe Michelle), of which Jean Lyle was probably happy to rid herself, and a
white bitch of German/English heritage bearing the unlikely name Jeune Fille d'Orleyn.
As
indicated above, Caprice was bred to Wycliffe Ian in 1965, and a white females from that litter, Chantilly
Felice, was sold to Lois Kletsch
(Ilex) of
Around
1970 Lois asked Joy Tongue if she could breed Felice
to Executive. [See Pedigree
#2] Joy later said "I was not too keen on this color mixture - a white bitch to a black dog... but it
wasn't going to be my litter and it was her choice."
Their
first litter produced only two puppies, both female, and as Lois wanted a male,
both were sold both as pets. Joy told her she could have a return service, and
the second litter was more successful, producing eight puppies - four white and
four black.
"She brought the two best males down to
Lois Kletsch was not particularly well known as a breeder, and
had only sold three when she had to move to
"I had 22 puppies of my own but she said she
would just have to put them to sleep as there was simply no chance of selling
them where she was, so of course I ended up taking them on."
Both
were successful. Bart, sold to JoAnna Sering, won 36 Group Firsts (and 19 Bests in Show) in only
40 appearances. Though he died of bloat at only five years of age, he had
already sired 34 champions. Barry, still owned by Lois Kletsch
but handled by Marie Langseth, went on to win both
American and Canadian championships, but is possibly better known as the sire
of Lou-Gin's Kiss Me Kate, at one time the top
winning dog of all breeds with 140 Bests in Show.
Jean Blackmore
(
Thomas's brother Timothy went
to Jean Blackmore and was used by Jean Lyle to sire
several Wycliffe litters between 1960 and 1963. For the first, he was bred back
to his mother, Jacqueline, to produce the "V" litter of 1960, which
had almost as much impact on the breed as the "T" litter of the
previous year.
From
the V litter, Veronica went
to the Kingsleys in New York, and produced 5
champions from Carillon Lousic and Dilemma,
including Annveron Bacardi Peach (referred to above),
later acquired by Dassin.
Virgil went
to Joan Schilke (Koronet)
and sired 50 champions, including Bibelot's Tall Dark & Handsome, Dassin's Daktari and Jocelyene Marjorie, in a career that lasted from 1961-70.
[For
additional details, see The
Dassin Kennel.]
Others
Not all were as successful. I have a copy of the
pedigree of Natasha's Wooly,
bred by Florene Nederhoff
of
Return
to: Wycliffe - Table of Contents | Diversity in Poodles
Copyright 1997,
1998 John B. Armstrong. The Canine Diversity Project. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.
Last revision